Sandvik Medical Solutions for the last 2 yearshave been enthusiastic users of the Renishaw ballbar system to verify the performance of their machine tools. Sandvik, based in Sheffield, UK, is a major supplier to many of the global brands within the healthcare industry, providing investment castings, forgings and finished medical implants and instruments for joint replacement and spinal surgery markets.

The exacting standards of their customers and the extensive QA system needed to comply with regulatory requirements in the industry means Sandvik are always looking for improvements in their manufacturing processes, which includes some fifty machine tools, including lathes, milling machines and machining centres.

Bob Monkhouse, Maintenance Manager, had seen a demonstration of the QC10 ballbar system when working for a previous company and was convinced it could bring benefits in manufacturing.

He joined Sandvik Medical Solutions and proposed purchasing a Renishaw QC10 ballbar system and was pleased it was approved. Bob explained, “the request for the ballbar was initially justified as a ‘planned preventative maintenance’ tool but it very soon became the backbone of our quality assurance system. I couldn’t understand the logic of not having a ballbar system. It knocks hours off of our servicing times, gives trends for quality analysis and maintenance and almost straight away a test can show what improvement we have made. In short using the ballbar gives us confidence at every level”.

He continues, “the ballbar system is used as a pre-qualification and post-qualification check for all machine moves (in-house or external) alongside the production of test pieces and additional electrical, air pressure and bed level checks. Ballbar test results describe the geometry of the machine very clearly which is very useful for identifying if a machine has been damaged during a move. Overall performance on the ballbar test must be within 10% of the pre move value to be acceptable”.

All machine tools are also subject to a ballbar test at least every 6 months, after machine maintenance and as a check if any problems are suspected. Jim White, Quality Engineer is keen to emphasise that, “regular checking of the machines minimises downtime but when we do have a machine problem, the ballbar system is used as part of the investigation – it’s a process of elimination”.